Here’s a simple solution to breaking the tie in the clownish state Senate. Flip a coin!

That’s how the Wyoming state Senate solved its partisan deadlock in 1974.

New York lawmakers, however, are looking at more conventional power-sharing arrangements tried in other states — such as New Jersey and Oklahoma where deadlocked legislatures chose “co-leaders” and “co-committee chairs” from each party.

“It worked and worked very well,” New Jersey Senate Democratic leader and former Gov. Richard Cody said of a 2002 deadlock that featured a Democratic governor, a Democratic Assembly and a 20-20 tie in the Senate.

The parties even agreed to pass an equal number of bills — 15 each — without incident, Cody said

In Oklahoma, Senate GOP floor leader Todd Lamb said, “We could have had an implosion of politics but didn’t.”

In other states — such as Arizona, Minnesota, Oregon and Virginia — one party chose the presiding officer while the other chose powerful committee heads.